Review: Answering God

Cover image for "Answering God" by Eugene H. Peterson

Answering God

Answering God, Eugene H. Peterson. Harper One (ISBN: 9780060665128) 1991.

Summary: Contends that the Psalms, explored here, are necessary instruction in prayer, understood as answering the God who addresses us.

It is not uncommon, when the questioned “How do I pray?” to say something like, “Just talk to God, expressing honestly what is on your heart.” Eugene H. Peterson, while not saying this is wrong, believes there is a lot more to prayer and praying. First of all, he proposes that praying is a tool. He believes that it is at the center of our being human. More than that, he proposes that prayer is a tool by which God works his will in us and by which we collaborate with that work. For Peterson, the Psalms are our necessary toolbox to train us in how to pray. So it has been throughout church history.

Peterson makes one more startling claim. We think prayer is about talking to God. Rather, he believes the Psalms are about answering God. Instead of our seeking God, God comes to us and speaks amidst our sin, our despair, or even our gratitude. The Psalms coach us in answering God, leading us into true conversation with God.

Before taking us through several Psalms that answer God in various ways, Peterson addresses some basic realities about the Psalms. They are not only texts, they are prayers written as poetry. As such, they take us into the depths of both God and ourselves, giving voice to the inchoate. They are not primarily about understanding ourselves. Rather, they are about addressing the one God who has everything to do with our lives. Furthermore, they are embedded in a canon of sixty-six books, part of a larger story of the People of God. Finally, although we often pray on our own, these are prayers of a community. When we pray these, we are praying with others, across the world and across the centuries.

Peterson begins at the beginning, with the “pre-prayers” of Psalms 1 and 2. Psalm 1 emphasizes meditation on Torah as the roots of our life, our prayers. Psalm 2 then leads us into adoration of the Lord and his Anointed, his Messiah, contrasted with the rulers of this world. Then as he unfolds Psalm 3, Peterson focuses on language. He contends language takes three forms, I being the language of intimacy and relationship, II the language of information, and III, the language of motivation. The Psalms are about Language I. Psalm 3 illustrates this with its cry against enemies, its expression of trust, its cry for salvation. No abstractions here but rather the language of urgent and intimate relationship.

In the following chapter, Peterson reminds us of how Psalms are set in a story–the David story, the bigger story of Israel, and ultimately a story of which we are a part. Both poetry and life have rhythms. Peterson observes for us the rhythms of evening and morning in Psalms 4 and 5. Psalm 4 begins the day in the evening and our rest in God’s care, followed by Psalm 5, with our rising in the morning to God’s work for us in the day. Then Peterson jumps to Psalm 18, observing how God teaches us to pray by metaphor. God is strength, rock, fortress, deliverer, shield, horn, and stronghold. Prayer is not gnostic. God is described but not idolized in material terms, not in spiritual abstractions.

As noted earlier, the Psalms imply a praying community. Peterson notes the liturgical notations in many Psalms. When we pray in community, we recognize that the one who summoned us is in charge. The Psalms are liturgy, but this hardly means bland as we speak the sharp-edged expressions of desperation, repentance, longing, and wonder. Then Peterson turns to the most sharp-edged psalm many of us would excise if we could, Psalm 137, with its dashing of little ones against rocks. The focus is on enemies, and Peterson argues we need to pray our hatred of our enemies before we get to the place of loving them. So this is a Psalm we desperately need.

The Psalms are about memory. We remember our creation, our implication in sin, the country of salvation. Hence, the Psalms give coherence to the disparate aspects of our lives. Finally, the Psalms end in an effusion of praise. We are thus reminded that the end of prayer, the end of life, and indeed, our destiny is the praise of God.

Thus, Peterson sums up the Psalms in ten words: Text, Way, Language, Story, Rhythm, Metaphor, Liturgy, Enemies, Memory, and End. I found that in the concision of these words and the chapters a clear scaffold on which to hang my praying of the Psalms. Peterson not only makes sense of the Psalms without a psalm-by-psalm commentary. He also gives us a primer on Christian prayer, both its purpose, and our primary instructional text. And in introducing the Psalms as the church’s prayer book, he invites us to rise from our merely personal and often idiosyncratic prayers, to pray with both ancient Israel and the church across the centuries.

The Month in Reviews: January 2026

Cover image for "The Search for a Rational Faith" by Daniel K. Williams

The Month in Reviews: January 2026

Introduction

It has been a cold and snowy January here in central Ohio. So I am hibernating in my book fort (at least figuratively!). One result is the twenty-one reviews that appear here. There are some oldies. one title published in 2026, and a number from last year. Finally, I discovered the scholarship of Dale Allison, Jr in a collection of essays on Jesus. I’ve mentioned the discovery of Catholic theologian Gerhard Lohfink. Two of his books appear here in reviews.

I began the year reviewing a marvelous book on economics from a historical Christian perspective. Then I was inspired by by a memoir of a high school dropout who went on to earn five degrees including a doctorate. I read the first book in my Jane Austen challenge. And I enjoyed two very different books on Ohio towns–Ripley and Urbana. There’s more I could say about other books, but I know you want to see the reviews!

The Reviews

Faithful ExchangeDavid W. Opderbeck. Fortress Press (ISBN: 9781506467016) 2025. Economic life through biblical and historic lenses with attention to current debates on capitalism versus socialism. Review

Sense and SensibilityJane Austen. Penguin Classics (ISBN: 9780141439662) 2003 (first published in 1811). Austen’s first novel, contrasting two sisters’ approach to love: common sense judgment versus more emotional sympathy. Review

Prayer Takes Us HomeGerhard Lohfink, Translated by Linda M. Maloney. Liturgical Press (ISBN: 9780814688069) 2020. What Christians believe about prayer and the various ways Christians pray and experience God in prayer. Review

Nailing ItNicole Massie Martin (foreword by Carey Nieuwhof). InterVarsity Press (ISBN: 9781514009741) 2025. A challenge to nail “leadership as usual” to the cross, embracing Jesus’ way of suffering service, and the hope of resurrection. Review

The Study: The Inner Life of Renaissance LibrariesAndrew Hui. Princeton University Press (ISBN: 9780691243320) 2024. Traces the Renaissance study through the lives of bibliophiles, artistic portrayals, and the darker side of bibliomania. Review

Marco Polo, If You Can (Blackford Oakes, Number 4), William F. Buckley, Jr. Mysterious Press/Open Road (ISBN: 9781504018524) 2015 (first published in 1981). Blackford Oakes awaits a death sentence in the Lubyanka as a spy, part of a plot to expose a Soviet mole. Review

The Journey of God, J. D. Lyonhart. IVP Academic (ISBN: 9781514009246) 2025. A re-telling of the Christian story in six movements, exploring questions seekers, skeptic, and believers ask. Review

The Man Who Died Twice (Thursday Murder Club, Number 2) Richard Osman. Penguin Books (ISBN: 9781984881014) 2022. Ibrahim is badly assaulted by a teenage thug and Elizabeth’s ex-husband shows up, suspected of stealing diamonds. Review

The Reformed Pastor (Puritan Paperbacks), Richard Baxter. Banner of Truth Trust (ISBN: 9780851511917) 1974 (first published in 1656). On pastoral care, beginning with care of oneself, and then of the people, emphasizing catechesis through visitation. Review

Interpreting JesusDale C. Allison Jr. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. (ISBN: 9780802879196) 2025. Six essays on Jesus addressing eschatology, Moses, miracles, women with Jesus, memory, and methods of attestation. Review

Beyond the River, Ann Hagedorn. Simon & Schuster. (ISBN: 9780684870663) 2004. A history of the Underground Railroad line passing through Ripley, Ohio, featuring the Rankin family and other townspeople. Review

How Did They Read the Prophets?, Michael B. Shepherd. Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co. (ISBN: 9780802885418) 2025. A study of Hebrew and Greek interpretations of the canonical prophets including Christian readings. Review

God Looks Like Jesus, Gregory A. Boyd & M. Scott Boren. Herald Press (ISBN: 9781513815510) 2025. In the life, ministry, teaching, and crucifixion of Jesus, we see the embodiment of what God is like. Review

The Common Rule Youth Edition, Justin Whitmel Early. InterVarsity Press (ISBN: 9781514010433) 2025. Eight spiritual habits or practices for teens and tweens to help them grow in their faith. Review

The Search for a Rational Faith, Daniel K Williams. Oxford University Press (ISBN: 9780197748039) 2026. Anglo-American efforts to make a reasoned defense of Christian faith amid the rise of Enlightenment reason. Review

The Emperor of All Maladies, Siddhartha Mukherjee. Scribner (ISBN: 9781668047033) 2025 (My review is of the 2010 edition). A biography of the disease, our understanding of its nature, and approaches to treating it. Review

Eden’s Clock (American Novels, Number 12), Norman Lock. Bellevue Literary Press (ISBN: 9781954276390) 2025. A widowed clocksmith commissioned to repair a clock in San Francisco experiences misadventures enroute and meets Jack London. Review

From Dropout to Doctorate, Terence Lester, PhD. InterVarsity Press (ISBN: 9781514011485) 2025. A personal memoir underscoring the structural obstacles for Blacks in poverty who aspire to advanced education. Review

Jesus and Community, Gerhard Lohfink (translated by john P. Galvin. Fortress Press (ISBN: 9780800618025) 1984. How Jesus fulfilled Israel’s call, first in the contrast society of the Twelve, and then in early Christian communities. Review

Formed to Lead, Jason Jensen. InterVarsity Press | Formatio (ISBN:9781514009901) 2025. Through reflection on Luke 1-4, proposes a vision of leadership rooted in formation of character and spiritual discernment. Review

Paper Girl, Beth Macy. Penguin Press (ISBN: 9780593656730) 2025. A memoir about growing up in Urbana, Ohio and how the town changed in ways that reflects the struggles of rural America. Review

Best Book of the Month

It took a bit of wrangling, but I was delighted to receive The Search for a Rational Faith by Daniel K. Williams. Williams does nothing less than give a historical account of efforts to offer reasons for believing the Christian faith. Not only that, he does this for the whole of American history, back to the English Puritans. He also suggests the intriguing idea that this has contributed to the relative vitality of Christian belief, particularly in comparison with Europe. Implicitly, it makes the case for the continuing importance of this work. For contemporary apologists, the account helps us to see how we stand on the shoulders of those who go before us.

Quote of the Month

David W. Opderbeck offers a scholarly but accessible overview of the history of Christian thinking about economics. In his conclusion, I thought he captures well the contours of truly Christian approach to economics:

“Freedom for generosity and freedom from the love of money and the lust of the eyes is offered in the waters of baptism and at the table with Jesus in the community of his people. Every -ism, including capitalism and socialism, is here exposed as unworthy of devotion. In every time and place discerning the Kairos and listening to the Spirit of Christ, we are called to act with grace and wisdom, affirming but relativizing private property rights, prioritizing the poor, emphasizing fairness, and actively waiting for the coming of Jesus, when God will be all-in-all” (p. 258).

What I’m Reading

My big reading project right now is Israel’s Scriptures in Early Christian Writings. It is a fairly comprehensive study of how Christians used Israel’s scriptures, collecting essays from top scholars in the field. I’ve got about 400 pages to go! I am also delighting in The First Nations Version of Psalms and Proverbs. The work of translating these texts into idioms of First Nations peoples carries a freshness, helping me see familiar texts in new ways. God, Where Are You by Dominique Young is written for especially for those who experience depression, and wonder where God is. She offers some great journaling prompts!

One of my Christmas gifts was Robert MacFarlane’s Is A River Alive. He writes luminously as he describes an expedition up the Los Cedros River in Ecuador (and two other rivers I’ve not yet gotten to). He makes the case that in worldview and law, we ought to see rivers, forests, and other natural elements as living beings with rights, particularly to their own flourishing. Finally, for fun, I’m enjoying one of those manor house mysteries with Inspector John Appleby, written by Michael Innes.

I wish you health, warmth and good books for these chilly nights (or warm nights if you live in the global south!).

The Month in Reviews is my monthly review summary going back to 2014! It’s a great way to browse what I’ve reviewed. The search box on this blog also works well if you are looking for a review of a particular book. Thanks for stopping by. and feel free to share this with others!

The Weekly Wrap: January 25-31

woman in white crew neck t shirt sitting on chair
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The Weekly Wrap: January 25-31

Poetry Reading or Readings?

I asked people on my Facebook page “Do you think you appreciate poetry more as written text or when it is spoken?”. Interestingly, most preferred the written text. However, the exception was those who wrote poetry. They preferred it spoken.

Why the difference? From what I can tell, poets have a sense of the cadences, the rhythms of the lines and know better how to convey what they were trying to do. On the other hand, those who enjoy the written text like the opportunity to read the lines over and over again, to study the words, phrases, even how lines are arranged into verses.

I’ve been posting readings of poems weekly on my Facebook page. I won’t pretend to be a great reader. But I’ve had people who don’t read poetry mention that the readings might make them reconsider. But what I would say is that reading poems aloud takes me more deeply into the poem. To read well means paying attention to the sound of words, words that recur, phrasing, which doesn’t always follow the written line or even verse. Then, it means trying to discern the mood and meaning of a poem to give that expression out loud. I have learned how hard this is, sometimes recording a dozen times or more.

Of course, just as with audiobooks, a good reading is everything. One of the most memorable readings, really a performance, was the video of Michael Sheen’s rendering of “‘Do not go gentle into that good night” by Dylan Thomas. It’s intense and he captures the rage in “Rage, rage against the dying of the light.” While reviewing it for this post, I happened to listen to several other different readings, each capturing something different.

Actually, I think both reading the written text and hearing the poetry are important. And with some longer poems, a reading may be hard to follow. Likewise, some poets arrange their text visually in ways not reproducible orally, unless simultaneously projecting the text.

All this is to say, if you struggle to get into poetry, you might try reading it aloud. Or search for someone who has read the poem. Follow along with the text. Give it a try and let me know what you think!

Five Articles Worth Reading

The articles I came across this week all seemed to explore what one might call “the big questions.” What was it about the unexamined life?

Jennifer Szalai reviews two books on living a life that matters in “The Longing to Matter Is No Laughing Matter.”

The rise of authoritarian leaders, our brave new technological world, global tensions, and our swiftly warming planet have left many with a lingering sense of existential dread. But this is not new. Livia Gershon explores philosophers and theologians who address this in “A History of Existential Anxiety.”

He was on Colbert this week and turned up on a number of book sites I follow. George Saunders new novel, Vigil is getting a lot of attention. It concerns a ghost who comes to the dying, helping them make sense of their lives and meet their deaths. Julius Taranto reviews the book in “George Saunders Brings Morality Back to Fiction.

I spent my life as a campus minister longing for spiritual revival to break out on campuses. Recently, there have been upticks in religious activity leading some to proclaim this. Maggie Phillips notes all this and says “not so quick” in “There Is No Religious Revival.” The evidence is not that strong yet.

Finally, Charles Mathewes reviews Jonathan B. Teubner’s Charity After Augustine in “Searching for Solidarity.” The article explores Augustine’s ideas of caritas and how it might help us both understand and address the rifts in our own social fabric.

Quote of the Week

Thomas Paine was born on January 29, 1737. He observed this interesting distinction between reputation and character:

“Reputation is what men and women think of us; character is what God and angels know of us.”

Miscellaneous Musings

I love the idea of being shut in during a snow storm. Except that if you own a home, you have to think about digging out. There was so much snow that it took five sessions to clear it away over a couple of days. All I wanted to do when I came in was warm up, and rest my aching muscles! I think I finally got to that reading romance on Tuesday. So all those lovely memes of curling up with a book while the snow flies–I wish!

Friday was the first day we received a regular mail delivery. But somehow, the folks from Paraclete Press got me Steven Garber’s new Hints of Hope. Steve is a good friend and a profound thinker. And I need some hope right now. Can’t wait to read it!

Just began reading Robert MacFarlane’s Is a River Alive? That is the serious question of the book and MacFarlane is an eloquent writer. For him, rivers are not an “it.”

Next Week’s Reviews

Monday: The Month in Reviews: January 2026

Tuesday: Eugene H. Peterson, Answering God

Wednesday: Jared Ayers, You Can Trust A God With Scars

Thursday: Jennifer Houston McNeel, Under Her Wings

Friday: Terry Pratchett, Mort

So, that’s The Weekly Wrap  for January 25-31.

Find past editions of The Weekly Wrap under The Weekly Wrap heading on this page.

Review: Paper Girl

Cover image of "Paper Girl" by Beth Macy

Paper Girl

Paper Girl, Beth Macy. Penguin Press (ISBN: 9780593656730) 2025.

Summary: A memoir about growing up in Urbana, Ohio and how the town changed in ways that reflects the struggles of rural America.

Beth Macy grew up in Urbana, Ohio, the county seat of Champaign County, about an hour west of where I live. She grew up in a family with a mostly absentee father. As the title suggests, to supplement the family income and have some spending money, she delivered the daily paper to a section of the town and got to know those families well. With the support of her mother, older siblings and teachers, she managed to do well in school. Then she learned of the Pell Grant program, that enabled her to complete journalism studies at Bowling Green State University. From there, she went on to a career in journalism and published several best-selling books.

Her mother remained in Urbana and as her health declined, Macy spent more time there and noticed the dramatic changes in her former home. It came home to her when she met Silas James, a talented graduate from her high school from a similar poor background. She describes his struggle to find hope and his efforts to scrape together the means to enroll in a two-year welding course and cobble together transportation to get there. She wonders why the investment in her education was no longer available for someone like Silas.

And she began to notice other changes. Declining graduation rates. Confederate flags in what was once a Union stronghold and underground railroad stop. Local companies sold to outside or foreign interests followed by layoffs. The paper she delivered and later interned with was down to two issues a week and barely hanging on. Talking to counselors at the high school, she learned of stunning amounts of abuse. There were changes among former classmates and family as well. A former boyfriend, a one-time radical, was deep into QAnon.

This book is both a memoir of growing up, with lots of memories of siblings and friends, and an exploration of the cultural changes and political divides she was encountering. Rather than simply cut off contact with those she disagreed with, including families, she interviewed a number of them as a good reporter. This was not always easy. For example, one sister told her the idea of her son marrying another man was an “abomination.” But she learns about the church and political beliefs that led to these differences. She showed up for homecomings and reunions.

More than that, she weighed how broader changes in the country contributed to the changes in her town. She looks at the gutting of the Pell Grant program, so helpful to her, that resulted in making it so much harder for students like Silas to get an education. She lays blame on both parties for forgetting rural America, except to harvest their votes. NAFTA led to the offshoring that closed factories that were the backbone of small towns throughout Ohio. Drugmakers made huge profits on addictive drugs that destroyed lives and families. And media echo chambers engendered distrust of other media, science, and education.

As she listens, and sometimes argues, she also wrestles with her own contribution to the divides. The last part of the book is titled “Showing Up.” Despite the hits, she keeps showing up with aging sisters, recalling family memories, particularly when her mom passes. And she grieves the death of her ex-boyfriend, who lacked health insurance. He delayed going to the hospital for too long with a case of pneumonia. Through all the discouragement of the 2024 election and its aftermath, she doesn’t give up. Recalling her rural roots, she contends that “We must scramble for hope fiercely, the way a farm girl wrestles with a muddy sow.”

The city where I live is a government/business/education/tech center and has boomed. Politically, it is a blue island. A majority of Ohio’s 88 counties struggle with the same issues as Urbana. I grew up in Youngstown (and was a paperboy). While Youngstown was and still is much larger (59,000 vs. Urbana’s 11,000), I’ve seen the same kinds of changes Macy describes. She helped me understand rural Ohio. Not only does she model a posture of grace for how we show up. She also models the fierce hope we need to lean into. And she makes the urgent case for forgotten rural America.

Review: Formed to Lead

Cover image of "Formed to Lead" by Jason Jensen

Formed to Lead

Formed to Lead, Jason Jensen. InterVarsity Press | Formatio (ISBN:9781514009901) 2025.

Summary: Through reflection on Luke 1-4, proposes a vision of leadership rooted in formation of character and spiritual discernment.

I’ve noticed that for the most part, those who read books on spiritual formation tend not to read books on leadership. Likewise, readers of leadership books are often not big readers of spiritual formation books. Jason Jensen believes there is ample evidence for the error of compartmentalizing these two things. Sometimes, it may be spiritually deep individuals who do not know how to lead others. But more often, it is evident in the moral failures of gifted and prominent Christian leaders. Rarely does their leadership failure for lack of leadership ability or training. More often it is a failure related to pride, a defect of character, or a lack of integrity, thinking lies and deception can accomplish the work of God.

Jensen has reflected deeply on Luke 1-4, the chapters that describe the formative period of Jesus life. He begins with Luke’s vision of leadership integrity, expressed in the Magnificat and the birth narrative. It is a vision of humility and bold faith in response to the Spirit’s initiative. Out of this emerges spiritual discernment. Thus, Jensen introduces us to themes that will recur in his study. Here we see those who surrounded Jesus reflecting these qualities

Having laid this groundwork, Jensen reflects on other formative experiences. In Luke 3, he considers how the word comes in the wilderness. He explores both our wilderness experiences, and how sought solitude to listen to God may form us. Sometimes, the “wilderness” of our context, particularly when we are out of our depth reveals blind spots and self-sufficiency. Wilderness humbles us, making us more aware of those on the margins.

The wilderness is also the site of Jesus baptism. Specifically, God affirms three important things in baptism: identity as God’s son or daughter, affection as the beloved of God, and God’s pleasure upon the baptized. For Jensen, baptism is also associated strongly with rest or sabbath. In sabbath, we cease doing to allow God to remind us of our identity, and his affection and pleasure upon us. Thus, we work and lead on other days out of this rest and restoration. Finally, for Jesus wilderness is the place of testing both in the abstinence from food and in resistance to the adversary’s warfare. His reflections upon and use of scripture confirms the power of the word that came in the wilderness, and the Spirit who filled him as he entered the wilderness. So it is that he emerges in the Spirit’s power to face illness, demons, and opposition.

Thus, the Spirit’s empowering of Jesus tested character results in spiritual authority. Jensen notes that spiritual authority is integrity, not charisma; love, not authoritarianism; and holiness, not pragmatism. As Jesus spoke from Isaiah 61:1-3, he shared prophecy that shaped his sense of call. Jensen likens calling for us to pilgrimage, in which we learn to attend to the markers along the way. We discern through repentance, intimacy with God, character formation, and the everyday journey of faith. He describes discernment as a “roundabout” way, commending the labyrinth as a practice in which we experience that “roundaboutness.”

Finally, leadership is about dependence and dying. Prayer is to leadership as breathing is to life. We both encounter God in devotion and commit those we lead to God in intercession. Leadership is also a rehearsal of our death. The shadow of death was upon the ministries of both John and Jesus. We live in the realization that we have already died in baptism and are not our own and our hope and consolation is in God alone.

Jensen interleaves his reflections with formational practices and group discussion guides. Rather than either an introspective book for individuals or a how to book of leadership, he gives us a book showing the ways God forms the character of Jesus in us so that he might work the ministry and mission of Jesus through us. This is leadership both rooted in godly character and empowered by God’s Spirit. It is leadership marked by integrity, love, and holiness. May God use this book to raise up such leaders!

_______________________

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review.

Review: Jesus and Community

Cover image of "Jesus and Community" by Gerhard Lohfink

Jesus and Community

Jesus and Community, Gerhard Lohfink (translated by john P. Galvin. Fortress Press (ISBN: 9780800618025) 1984.

Summary: How Jesus fulfilled Israel’s call, first in the contrast society of the Twelve, and then in early Christian communities.

One of my delightful discoveries as a Christian was that faith was not just a “me and Jesus” thing. Contrary to Western individualism, I discovered that Christian faith was social, that I was called into God’s new society. This meant not only mutual support of one another but that in some ways, we were intended to be a visible model of Jesus coming kingdom. But where does all this come from in the teaching and ministry of Jesus? So often, my sources were Acts and Paul’s letters. In this book, Gerhard Lohfink affirms the social dimension of Christianity and how this was realized in the teaching and ministry of Jesus.

Besides his Introduction and Postscript, the book consists of four chapters. Lohfink begins by emphasizing Jesus mission to Israel as the People of God. John prepared the way by calling this people to repentance. Early in Jesus’ ministry he calls twelve, many from John’s followers, prophetically harking back to Israel’s twelve tribes. His healing works proclaimed the coming of God’s kingdom rule as did his model prayer. But what about the Gentiles? Salvation was for them, but they would see the light through Israel. Yet in the end, Israel’s leaders rejected Jesus. Yet Jesus fulfilled Israel’s destiny as God’s people both through his atoning death for all and through the community of disciples who become the nucleus of this redeemed People of God.

Since the disciples are so important, Lohfink focuses the second chapter on them. He observes that there is a circle of disciples beyond the twelve, including women. The Sermon on the Mount sets forth for these disciples a vision of the new social order of God’s people they represent. Those who do God’s will are Jesus new family. But in it, there is but one father, with no patriarchal domination. It is a society that turns from violence. Yet this new social order is a light burden, one borne with Jesus the servant an his people. However it also anticipates the eschatological fulfillment of Israel’s destiny to bless the nations as the city on the hill.

But what happened following the ascension of Jesus to rule at God’s right hand? This is the focus of chapter three. Returning to Jerusalem, the disciples began to live out the reality of this renewed people of God, awaiting the return of the king, which they believed imminent. Empowered by the Holy Spirit, they continue to do the powerful works of Jesus. Social barriers fall as all share in this empowering presence. Lohfink highlights their distinctive “togetherness,” citing twenty-three references in the New Testament. Their mutual care and love for each other sets them apart as a “contrast society.” They become a sign for the nations.

Finally, chapter four draws on early Christian writings to delineate how Christian communities continued this vision of the people of God as “contrast societies.” The were marked as one new people from among the peoples of the empire. They received grace both to heal and to die as martyrs. Fraternal care meant there were no needy and believers looked after each other’s welfare. As a contrast society, their moral standards set them apart from the rest of society as did their exclusive allegiance to God among the gods. Likewise, their renunciation of violence led to the refusal of military service. These aspects of being a contrast society led to attacks and persecution. Yet their life heralded God’ in-breaking reign and continued to draw many.

Lohfink’s postscript poses the question of when the church ceased to see itself as a contrast society, heralding God’s in-breaking kingdom. He believes the turning point was Constantine, and particularly Augustine’s City of God. Not only does Augustine portray the two cities in a kind of side by side stasis through history. He also portrays the kingdom as entirely future and transcendent, not imminent.

Lohfink’s study offers a picture of Christian community captivated by a great work of God through Christ in the people of God. Through that grace, in both love and the Spirit’s power, they stood out as a contrast society. Implicit in all this, is why is this not so today? Lohfink, acting on his theological work, joined and helped lead an intentional Christian community. And the book shows us a vision that goes back to Jesus and how the disciples turned that vision into dynamic praxis. In my life, I’ve watched church growth movements give way to political influence, while becoming increasing bankrupt spiritually and morally. This work, ironically from 1984, calls us from these spiritual dystopias back to the gospel of the kingdom of God for the People of God.

Review: From Dropout to Doctorate

Cover image of "From Dropout to Doctorate" by Terence Lester, PhD

From Dropout to Doctorate

From Dropout to Doctorate, Terence Lester, PhD. InterVarsity Press (ISBN: 9781514011485) 2025.

Summary: A personal memoir underscoring the structural obstacles for Blacks in poverty who aspire to advanced education.

Dr. Terence Lester, his sister and mother fled an abusive husband at age five. At age nine, the Rodney King beating at the hands of police deeply traumatized him. Despite his mother’s efforts, Terence joined gangs, became a juvenile delinquent, experienced homelessness, and then dropped out of school when told his grades weren’t good enough to graduate with his class. At one level, this book is a narrative of how Dr. Lester, over twenty years went from high school dropout to earning five degrees including a doctorate in public policy. During this time, he launched Love Beyond Walls, a Christian ministry among Atlanta’s homeless.

This book is about more than an inspiring narrative. It is also an account of the barriers impoverished Black children face in working their way out of poverty. Lester delineates five components of trauma that undercut even the hope of a better life: historical/systemic oppression, injustice/policy, poverty/social conditions, trauma/barriers, and educational injustices.

First, Lester recounts the history of systemic oppression of Black from slavery to the war on drugs and Rodney King. He describes the pervasive impact of poverty as it impacted his life. For example. he scored ten out of ten on the ACEs scale (Adverse Childhood Experiences). He describes the trauma of showing up at school without pencils and in secondhand clothes. However, when educators who are not trauma-informed approach such children, they miss opportunities for support.

He shows the injustices of educational redlining, in which certain districts in poverty areas have substandard funding and resources. Living in proximity with poverty comes with multiple challenges, which Lester enumerates. All these were contributing factors that led to his dropping out. Through the encouragement of a man at a YMCA, friends of his father, his mother, and a teacher who saw his potential, Lester returned as a fifth year senior, and graduated. Around this time, he attended a Bible study and said “yes” to Christ.

He began attending church while working a demeaning warehouse job to earn funds to go on to college. Then a businessman who saw his emerging gifts talked to him about his future and offered to help pay for college, setting him on the road to earn four more degrees, culminating in his doctorate. In addition to directing Love Beyond Walls, he directs the public policy and social change program at Simmons College. Throughout, he chronicles how important was the support of his Christian community and of educators who create safe spaces for the advancement of Blacks and other people of color.

The book also describes the healing the trauma of the broken relationship with his father beginning with a visit to the ICU when his father had suffered a serious stroke. As they continued to talk, his father described the traumas of his own childhood, illustrating the reality of generational trauma. There were apologies and forgiveness, and then his father decided to be baptized.

This book is more than an inspiring personal story. It is also a call to recognize the systemic challenges impoverished Blacks and others face. Lester shows how Christian community and educational support can be so important. But he also underscores the public policies needed to address educational injustices. Sadly, it appears we have opted to believe the playing field is level and without obstacles. Lester’s story does not support that narrative. Rather, he shows how, despite the barriers and the uneven field, he overcame because of substantial personal, financial, and educational support. His story makes me wonder how many others have aspirations like his but struggle to maintain hope that they, too, might one day achieve the status of “Doctor.”

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Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review.

Review: Eden’s Clock

Cover image of "Eden's Clock" by Norman Lock

Eden’s Clock

Eden’s Clock (American Novels, Number 12), Norman Lock. Bellevue Literary Press (ISBN: 9781954276390) 2025.

Summary: A widowed clocksmith commissioned to repair a clock in San Francisco experiences misadventures enroute and meets Jack London.

In April of 1906, Frederick Heigold spots Jack London in a bar. Heigold wants to tell London his story, not an easy task since Heigold lost his voice to a Civil War wound and uses a slate to communicate. This narrative, the concluding novel in the American Novels series by Norman Lock, reflects the story he wants to share with London, very different than the ones he writes.

After the Civil War, he returned to Dobb’s Ferry and took up his trade as clocksmith. He had a long marriage with his wife Lillian, a suffragist activist, who had recently died from a tragic accident in their home. His talents became widely known, so much so that he had received a commission to repair the Union Deport clock on the Embarcadero in San Francisco. He agrees, and after preparations, goes to New York City to embark on a cross-country journey.

However, that journey will take six months. Through a series of misadventures, he encounters the underside of America. Falling in on arrival, by chance, with the “wrong people” he is arrested and spends months in The Tombs. Finally released, he falls into the clutches of a scamming preacher. Only when he meets up with Bonaparte, a former slave, does he escape, embarking on a merchant ship to the Caribbean. Shipwrecked, he nearly drowns before rescue by residents from Edisto Island. Finally, he embarks on the cross-country trip, meeting a further assortment of characters.

Most of the novel is Heigold’s misadventures. Only the last forty pages chronicle his arrival. A historic detail, reflected in the cover image, is that Heigold’s encounter with London occurs on the eve of the Great San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906. We spend the novel wondering if Heigold will fix the clock and talk to London.

There is a resilient sadness about Heigold. What drew me in was the narrative voice of this voiceless man. But I must admit that I found myself losing interest during the interminable detours. I wondered, will he ever reach San Francisco? Yet the journey serves a purpose. Heigold’s experiences tell a story of the underside of the American experience. This contrasts with both London’s novels and the popular painting of American Progress, by John Gast (reproduced in the book). Heigold’s tale dispels the utopian dreams of his time and resonates with the questions we have about “American greatness” in our own time.

I’ve not read the previous numbers in this series. But if this is the conclusion, I thought the novel anticlimactic. The interesting narrator and the important theme were not enough to carry the story for me. Unlike other series I’ve read out of order, this didn’t make want to go back and read earlier numbers.

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Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review.

The Weekly Wrap: January 18-24

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The Weekly Wrap: January 18-24

The Next C. S. Lewis?

No, this is not an announcement. Rather, I’ve encountered a few writers of late who have aspirations to write the next Mere Christianity (one even admitted it). And it is a discussion item that comes up periodically in Christian circles. It’s been nearly one hundred years since Lewis began writing and I cannot think of a single figure who was an educated public spokesperson for the Christian faith. The closest to come to this in my mind was the late pastor, Timothy Keller. He spoke publicly and winsomely about his faith. And his books enjoyed a circulation beyond Christian circles.

Keller underscores why so many of these Lewis-wannabes have a hard time achieving this status, if it even ought to be sought. Lewis, through his wartime broadcasts came to the notice of a public hungering for spiritual substance. Keller, based in New York gained access to media that gave him something of a similar platform. These days, especially in our diverse and Balkanized media, that kind of wide recognition is increasingly difficult. In addition, Lewis as an academic who read widely and deeply and remembered everything had an incredible store on which to draw in writing and speaking.

However, Lewis paid professionally for his public influence. Despite first-rate scholarly writing, he was not considered “serious” and only was granted the equivalent of tenure late in his academic career. Someone aspiring to the work of a “public intellectual” needs to be willing to jettison hopes for academic accolades.

Finally, I wonder if our different time requires something different. I have no idea what that is. However, I expect that if someone emerges who may someday be described as the “C.S. Lewis of our time,” it won’t be because they were trying to be like C.S. Lewis in up to date garb. More likely, I suspect it will be a person or persons who is simply faithful to their calling with their particular training, talents, and situation in life. And I suspect that the only one they will have been trying to be like is Jesus.

Five Articles Worth Reading

As I write, a winter storm is barreling toward us that most are saying it is the largest snowfall in at least five years. We’ll see. But for readers, “snow days” are reading days. And just in time for that, Calum Marsh has recommendations of “10 Long Books for Long Winter Nights.”

I thought Mark Carney’s speech at the Davos World Economic Summit was an epoch-defining speech, particular in light of the turn in foreign policy of the United States. If you haven’t heard the full speech or read a transcript you can listen to or “Read Mark Carney’s full speech on middle powers navigating a rapidly changing world.” The speech clocks in at under seventeen minutes.

I’ve long maintained that when people ban books or governments restrict what books can be read, they send a message that reading is undesirable. This seems to me something we don’t want to do in an age when reading is declining (unless we don’t want people to read). It turns out that research supports this contention. Teens read more when they can freely choose, according to “The Generational Impact of Book Bans on Teens: Book Censorship News, January 23, 2026.”

“I am lovable and capable.” This was a mantra for a generation of children. Todd Shy, a headmaster, challenges the focus on “You” in progressive education. He suggests that a focus on “Not You” might be far more important in “You and Not You.”

Finally, Bonnie Tsui explores why so many writers are athletes, or at least exercise regularly in “Why So Many Writers Are Athletes.” It turns out there is a connection between movement and creativity. Maybe that’s why our instructor in an art class this fall always began classes by having us get up and dance or at least move to music.

Quote of the Week

Poet Derek Walcott was born January 23, 1930. He remarked:

“If music goes out of language, then you are in bad trouble.”

I wonder if we are in bad trouble, given the coarseness of our public discourse.

Miscellaneous Musings

Want to learn a new language? Have you considered Akkadian? In 2011 University of Chicago scholars completed a 21-volume dictionary of Akkadian, our oldest written language. Now that dictionary is available as a free download as a ,pdf document. Open Culture offers this information in this article: “Dictionary of the Oldest Written Language–It Took 90 Years to Complete, and It’s Now Free Online.” There is also a link to listen to the Epic of Gilgamesh read in Akkadian. There’s something for your winter evenings!

However, I won’t be doing that anytime soon. My big book for winter is Israel’s Scriptures in early Christian Writings which comes in at 1166 pages. One thing that makes it easier is that each chapter includes a lengthy bibliography. If I read 50 pages a day, I can count on 12-15 pages to be bibliography, which I just skim.

I came across an article that was an excerpt of a book by Josiah Hesse titled On Fire For God. Drawing on both personal history and cultural analysis, he traces how the Jesus Movement of the 1970’s morphed into the Religious Right. That caught my attention as a product of that movement and still religious, but not part of the Religious Right. As a side note, I wrote the publicist for the book upon seeing the article at the beginning of this week, requesting a copy. It landed on my doorstep Thursday. Very impressed with the folks at Pantheon Books!

Next Week’s Reviews

Monday: Norman Lock, Eden’s Clock

Tuesday: Terence Lester, PhD, From Dropout to Doctorate

Wednesday: Gerhard Lohfink, Jesus and Community

Thursday: Jason Jensen, Formed to Lead

Friday: Beth Macy, Paper Girl

So, that’s The Weekly Wrap  for January 18-24.

Find past editions of The Weekly Wrap under The Weekly Wrap heading on this page.

Review: The Emperor of All Maladies

Cover image of "The Emperor of All Maladies" by Siddhartha Mukherjee

The Emperor of All Maladies

The Emperor of All Maladies, Siddhartha Mukherjee. Scribner (ISBN: 9781668047033) 2025 (My review is of the 2010 edition).

Summary: A biography of the disease, our understanding of its nature, and approaches to treating it.

Excuse my bluntness. Cancer sucks. I’ve watched friends and beloved relatives die cruel deaths from it. The survivors I know, including those in my own family, while grateful to be alive, bear the marks of their experience. The fear of recurrence is never far away. I’ve had my own brushes with cancer with skin lesions and precancerous polyps. Early detection and treatment made these just brushes. The truth is, all of us will have some form cancer or know someone close to us who does. And for anyone with a serious cancer diagnosis, life changes irrevocably on the day they receive that diagnosis.

The marvel of Siddhartha Mukherjee’s The Emperor of All Maladies is to write beautifully, elegantly, clearly, and honestly about this ugly fearsome disease. The title recognizes the powerful adversary cancer is. It arises when the normal cellular mechanisms that check growth and multiplication go haywire. Also, additional changes allow it to spread and resist our own defenses as well as external agents.

Mukherjee also calls this a biography of cancer. He chronicles a four thousand year history of the disease from the Egyptian physician Imhotep, who first described it to the Persian Queen Atossa, who had a slave remove a breast to fight breast cancer in 440 BC, futilely as it turned out because the cancer had spread. He traces that history down to the present discussing both our slowly growing understanding of the disease and key figures in the history of its treatment. Mukherjee also personalizes it with Carla, one of his patients, whose journey he traces at various points of the book.

He begins with when cancer was thought to be “black bile.” Yet doctors found no such substance, even in cadavers. Early on, a cancer diagnosis simply was a death sentence. Apart from quack remedies, there was no treatment. Only palliative care was possible. With the advent of antiseptic measures, surgeries were used to remove cancers, such as William Halsted’s radical mastectomies, often quite extensive and disfiguring. But quickly, doctors learned that if cancer was not local, surgery was futile. Another blunt instrument was radiation, again effective with local cancers (although it could also cause cancer).

Mukherjee introduces us to Sidney Farber, who moved from the laboratory to the clinic to fight childhood leukemia and other cancers. Antifolates and other early chemotherapies extended the lives of children. Farber teamed up with Mary Lasker to lead an effort to secure funding for research into other chemotherapies. They created the Jimmy Fund, named after a young boy, Einar Gusfson, with leukemia who was dubbed “Jimmy.” A baseball fan, he won the hearts of Boston’s baseball teams, and money poured in.

From the 1950’s to the 1970’s, Mukherjee chronicles burgeoning, hubristic efforts to win the “war on cancer” with chemotherapy. More and more extreme combinations of drugs resulted in both victories and a lot of failures. But something was missing. While throwing all these therapies at cancer, clinicians gave little time to understanding how cancer worked. Not only that, but those who researched the cellular mechanisms of cancer weren’t talking to the clinicians who treated it.

Then, beginning in the 1980’s, there was an explosion in understanding the nature of cancer, and the genetic mechanisms behind its uncontrolled multiplication and spread. Just as the human genome has been sequenced, so are cancer genomes, tracing pathways by which normal cells turn cancerous. This has been accompanied by advances in both prevention and therapeutics, including identifications of mutations like the BRCA gene that leads to some breast cancers.

Since 2010, there have been an avalanche of advances in cancer biology, prevention, and treatment. So in 2025, Mukherjee released an updated edition of the book with four new chapters detailing these advances.

Despite the heartbreaks and latent fears I’ve known, I found Mukherjee’s account fascinating. Mukherjee weaves into the history and the science real people, both those who die and those who survive. His book stands as a warning against hubris in announcing “cures for cancer.” He helps us understand why cancer is such a difficult to conquer emperor and what has been and is being done. He reflects the realistic hope of every cancer survivor who speaks, not of cures, but of “no evidence of disease” that allows one to live another day. Mukherjee also reminds us of the army of people working to prevent cancer and treat it, not giving up on conquering the emperor.